Archived Content

Information released online from June 2012 to September 2017.Note: Content in this archive site is NOT UPDATED, and external links may not function. External links to other Internet sites should not be construed as an endorsement of the views contained therein.

Trade and Regulatory Reform

Trade and investment are powerful engines that create jobs and drive economic growth, and help reduce poverty.

USAID’s Office of Trade and Regulatory Reform in the Bureau for Economic Growth, Education and Environment) (E3/TRR) works with developing country officials and businesses to reform and modernize trading systems to help create jobs.

The world’s least developed countries comprise 12 percent of the global population but currently account for less than one percent of global trade. Building capacity and expanding trade regionally and internationally are critical for developing countries to establish their own trade opportunities.

Specifically, the Agency works with developing countries to:

Implement trade agreements;

Facilitate trade flows; and

Enhance economic effectiveness.

USAID has provided assistance to more than 28 countries to successfully accede to the World Trade Organization (WTO) over the past decade, helping them to move millions of people out of poverty.

E3/TRR partners with international and local businesses to promote trade reform that leads to changes on the ground and deepens trade and investment opportunities. Building on the 2013 World Trade Organization Trade Facilitation Agreement, USAID launched a public/private global trade alliance to support TFA implementation. This initiative, the Global Alliance for Trade Facilitation (Alliance), will streamline the movement of goods across borders in a commercially viable manner to open up trade opportunities here and in developing countries abroad. The Alliance was launched in 2015.

Trade capacity building (TCB) can have a strong return on investment. An evaluation of Agency TCB programs found that for every dollar spent on USAID assistance, a $42 increase in the value of developing country exports followed within two years.